Sunday Times

SA and US firms in talks to produce vaccine locally

- By PAUL ASH

SA could have its own vaccine manufactur­ing capability in as little as three years if a deal between local pharmaceut­ical firm Biovac and a US vaccine developer comes to fruition.

Cape Town-based Biovac announced on Thursday it had formed a partnershi­p with ImmunityBi­o to manufactur­e the US firm’s candidate Covid-19 vaccine.

In a move that will dramatical­ly alter vaccine distributi­on, it is also being tested in the form of a tablet. “That will be a game-changer,” said Biovac CEO Morena Makhoana.

The currently approved Covid-19 vaccines all need to be stored at temperatur­es ranging from about -6°C to -70°C in the case of the Pfizer vaccine.

“There’s a billion people who won’t get vaccinated if we rely on the cold chain,” SAborn ImmunityBi­o MD Patrick Soon-Shiong told the Sunday Times this week.

“If those billion people don’t get vaccinated and they get infected — especially in places where there’s HIV and immune suppressio­n — you will have continuous mutations because the viral evolution will cause this virus to find a way.”

ImmunityBi­o’s candidate vaccine can be taken orally by swallowing a capsule or placing it under the tongue, or administer­ed by injection.

“There isn’t anybody else in the world that’s taken one vaccine and given three routes of administra­tion,” Soon-Shiong said.

Makhoana said the two companies had been in talks since July last year as they thrashed out the details for the partnershi­p, over which Soon-Shiong had had high-level discussion­s with SA’s health ministry.

“We had to ensure it was not just a bilateral agreement but also that government was on board,” Makhoana said.

Soon-Shiong confirmed he had been in talks with Biovac for about six months about expanding SA’s vaccine manufactur­ing capability.

“One of the problems with this vaccine nationalis­m is that South Africa has to be completely self-sufficient in manufactur­ing, all the way from manufactur­ing the raw material,” he said.

“We need scale. Biovac is fantastic medium-scale — about 30-million vials [a year]. We need a billion vials.”

The partnershi­p is a shot in the arm for Biovac, a state-backed company establishe­d in 2003 to revive local human vaccine production in Southern Africa. Africa does not have any vaccine-manufactur­ing capability.

The new vaccine is designed to work in two ways, firstly by triggering an immune response and also killing the virus.

The hAd5 T-cell SARS-CoV-2 vaccine is undergoing parallel first-phase clinical trials in the US as well as at the Wellcome Centre for Infectious Diseases Research in Africa in Khayelitsh­a, Cape Town.

The vaccine will need to undergo phase two and three trials before it is approved. It will also have to be tested against other vaccines as well as the usual placebo.

The rigorous process means the ImmunityBi­o vaccine is unlikely to be available any time soon. “All going well, it should be ready by early 2022,” said Makhoana.

The first batch of ImmunityBi­o’s vaccine will have to be imported as Biovac will first have to build a new facility to manufactur­e it in SA, which could take at least two years.

Part of the lag is because firms are often reluctant to part with their intellectu­al property. Setting up vaccine plants to manufactur­e the active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s is also expensive.

Makhoana said he hoped the partnershi­p would help push SA into the spotlight as a vaccine manufactur­er.

In November, Biovac was cleared to begin formulatin­g Prevnar 13, a childhood antipneumo­nia vaccine, on behalf of US-based pharma giant Pfizer. It also produces a paediatric vaccine on behalf of global pharma company Sanofi Pasteur that aims to prevent diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, hepatitis B, haemophilu­s influenzae B and poliomyeli­tis.

ImmunityBi­o makes late-clinical-stage immunother­apy drugs and vaccines for combating cancers and infectious diseases.

In a move that will dramatical­ly alter vaccine distributi­on, it is also being tested in the form of a tablet Morena Makhoana, left Biovac CEO

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